The Deck I Would Play At SCG Indianapolis

The release of Guilds of Ravnica brought some exciting times, but unfortunately Guilds of Ravnica Standard was a tad stale toward the end. Golgari Midrange and Izzet Drakes asserted their dominance, and although the specifics of those decks changed several times over the course of the format and other decks rose up to fight them, they were the clear
winners. That Standard format set the stage for Ravnica Allegiance's debut this weekend, which brings with it the other five guilds, and most importantly, the other five shocklands.

Ari Lax made a good case for three-color decks being the best place to look now that we have pristine mana, using the argument that those are what the best decks consisted of last time we were on Ravnica. Granted, when your mana is good and you don't get too punished by playing three colors, you likely should since your power level will typically eclipse the two-color competition, but I'm honestly not sure that's the case here. As always, context is key.

The multi-colored cards are arguably less powerful this time around. Additionally, the punishment for being three colors is fiercer, as Mono-Red and Boros Aggro are both blisteringly fast aggressive decks that didn't really exist last time. There were things like Gruul Aggro and Naya Blitz, but those were largely dependent on creatures, unlike the sixteen-burn spell red decks and Heroic Reinforcements we must deal with now.

By far, the most important thing for #SCGINDY is finding a way to beat Mono-Red. Whether or not Mono-Red's Arena success will translate to real life remains to be seen, but the deck is still incredible and will be everywhere. You must play by certain rules if you want to beat Mono-Red Aggro. Traction is huge, as is being able to turn the corner and clock them before they burn you out. Because maintaining traction is so difficult, racing is nearly impossible.

Here are some shells that I've found to be effective against Mono-Red and are mostly what I'd build around for #SCGINDY.

While being four mana is clearly not ideal, Shalai has arguably the most powerful impact against Mono-Red. When backed up by removal to stop their constant sources of damage, they basically have to spend two spells to remove her.

White aggressive decks absolutely have the tools to race Mono-Red Aggro. They also tend to do a pretty job of brick-walling the opposing red creatures.

Ghalta with haste isn't particularly fair. However, Gruul lacks the disruption that other decks do and it mostly consists of creatures, so their options are limited. That said, they have some of the best rate cards in the format.

A hasty Ghalta is one way to swing a race, but some versions of Gruul have been packing Collision // Colossus plus Thud to steal wins. In a pinch, Skarrgan Hellkite can also provide the much-needed haste for winning a race. That typically ends up a turn short against a normal draw, which makes me lean on the Colossus side of things if I'm really trying to beat up on red.

Four toughness is the easiest break-point to point out considering the red decks are true burn decks, and therefore rarely have Lava Coil in their maindeck. Similarly, Thorn Lieutenant makes their life difficult by being hard to attack through and hard to remove, which is all the four-toughness creatures are trying to accomplish in the first place.

If you want to brick wall red decks early, green has some great options.

Similarly, Enigma Drake is quite good, both as a blocker and an attacker. Sadly, the rest of the deck is lacking against red, and the fact that most of the time they're just spinning their wheels means that Izzet is often the underdog.

If you could play eight copies of each, then you'd have a deck.

"Gain six life and put up a giant wall" has been frustrating red decks since Jadelight Ranger's printing. Again, green has an early-game package that's excellent against red.

Gruul

Of all the new Ravnica Allegiance guilds, Gruul is arguably the toughest to build, which is odd to say about a deck whose goal is play to creatures and smash people.

The successful versions from Magic Online used Shock and Lightning Strike, but I'm not a fan of that approach. In theory, having the reach could help close games, but if those cards were creatures, I'd likely be better off curving out and putting pressure on my opponent. If Gruul had literally zero ways to close games, I might be interested, but that's not the case.

Lands (23)

Spells (5)

Sideboard

This deck is fast, but not the fastest that it could possibly be. Instead of going for hyper aggression, I want some staying power and potential mana sinks in order to compete against midrange decks.

There's the possibility of playing a lower to the ground version of Gruul with Collision // Colossus and Thud as a combo finish, which also gives you outs to scary cards like Lyra Dawnbringer. Either way, having something of a burst finish can be invaluable against decks you need to race, such as Mono-Red Aggro.

You have the best creatures at every spot on the curve, and I wanted to lean into that strength rather try to kill people as quickly as possible. There are other decks that are better at killing on Turn 4 if you're interested.

Mardu

Judith, the Scourge Diva is a great card. Unfortunately, decks that are built around her are typically the type that perform poorly against Goblin Chainwhirler. You can play a more aggressive version with Vicious Conquistador and Fireblade Artist, but those are weaker in a vacuum and don't necessarily solve the problem.

Unfortunately, Judith seems like she's poorly positioned in week one. My version is an attempt to fix some of those problems, but it's not perfect.

Lands (18)

Spells (22)

Obviously best-of-one is a different animal than best-of-three, so I would recommend against copying this maindeck completely. Eighteen lands is the clear talking point, as that might not be viable in real life compared to when you have access to Arena's hand smoothing algorithm. Then again, Light up the Stage does alter things dramatically. It'll be interesting to see where people land and what is actually the correct mana ratio for this one.

Similarly to the manabase, figuring out the correct spells to play is tough too. Red has so many good cards that sacred cows are suddenly less sacred.

Runaway Steam-Kin is a strong source of constant damage that's incredible against midrange decks that are light on spot removal. When facing decks with sweepers or the mirror match, Runaway Steam-Kin tends to die for little value. Goblin Chainwhirler is another powerful card that's difficult to block, deals some chip damage, and can completely decimate mirror matches or Boros Aggro.

That said, these cards are poor against spot removal. I've also found that when you load up on card drawing and burn spells (or cards that will almost always be good for some damage, like Ghitu Lavarunner), your card drawing becomes more potent and your deck is more dangerous as a whole.

Last season, you could cast Risk Factor, they'd let you draw three cards, and you'd draw Experimental Frenzy, Runaway Steam-Kin, and a Mountain. These days, you're basically always drawing 5-6 damage worth of cards and that's truly when Risk Factor is at its best. The cheaper card drawing spells lead to having a leaner red deck with explosive damage capabilities, so Experimental Frenzy is basically outmoded at this point.

There's a version with Carnival//Carnage and Rix Maadi Reveler alongside the requisite Rakdos dual lands, but that type of build has numerous downsides. First of all, the splash isn't free. Dragonskull Summit can create awkward scenarios for your deck that needs to curve out and Blood Crypt is a liability in the mirror. They also have the downside of being worse with card drawing in general because they aren't necessarily always good for damage or are too clunky to really take advantage of it.

Austin's maindeck is great, but in real life, I'd recommend increasing the land count slightly, then playing this sideboard:

Golgari Midrange

Realistically, a midrange deck that can gain traction, has removal, doesn't fold to Wilderness Reclamation, and can grind with other midrange or control decks could be great. Golgari from last season mostly fits that mold, although we have some upgrades.

Given that Golgari is great at making land drops, thanks to the explore package, Hydroid Krasis is always going to be X=4 or so. Even so, is that actually better than Carnage Tyrant? It's hard to say. Your gameplan changes from "stick big sticky threat" to "completely attrition them out," but that's not the worst thing.

Aside from the debate of whether it's strategically superior, being able to draw a bunch of cards and gain life will probably stabilize you and allow you to put your opponent away quickly. It's not the same type of resiliency as Carnage Tyrant, nor is it the same type of end game, but Hydroid Krasis does seem like it's stronger given that it scales into the lategame.

What does a deck like that look like? Well, thankfully other players have done the work for us.

Spells (7)

Sideboard

Who doesn't love midrange creatures that give you a bunch of card advantage, ultimately capping out with a Sphinx's Revelationesque win condition that leaves a giant body behind? If consistency is key, playing the explore package is what you want.

I've seen other versions that play Frilled Mystic as well, and I gotta say, I rather like that idea. The mana isn't perfect since you have to trade any Swamps or Memorial to Follys for lands that produce blue or green, but it's doable.

Since there's already a lategame in place, I might argue Frilled Mystic isn't entirely necessary. Then again, neither is Carnage Tyrant. Maybe Hydroid Krasis does for Golgari what Chapin used to say about Cruel Ultimatum: It's not good against your worst matchups, but it gives you such an edge in grindy matchups that you can afford to load your deck with worse cards against those decks to help in your bad matchups.

If that's the case, we should probably take advantage of that and need to be building our Sultai decks differently.

Winning at SCG Indy

If I had to register a deck right now, it would be my Gruul deck. Sultai is likely one of the best decks, but I don't have enough experience with them to be able to build them effectively. Copying MisplacedGinger's list isn't a bad idea, though. Ideally, your deck for #SCGINDY needs to check Mono-Red Aggro while also having game against Wilderness Reclamation decks.

About Gerry Thompson

Gerry Thompson is a Constructed specialist, Platinum pro, and former SCG Tour end boss. His career highlights include twelve Grand Prix Top 8s with two wins and seven SCG Invitational Top 8s with two wins. He won Pro Tour Amonkhet, lost in the finals of Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan, and made the Top 8 of Pro Tour Gatecrash. Many of the first SCG Tour records were set by him.